Mississippi unseals secret files on war against black civil rights

Agence presse francaise, 17 March 1998

JACKSON, Mississippi, March 17 (AFP) - Secret files from a
segregation-era state spy agency were being unsealed here Tuesday in a
move expected to shed new light on Mississippi authorities' fight against
black civil rights.

The 132,000 pages from the activities of the East German Stasi-like
Mississippi Sovereignty Commission (MSC) had been kept in a locked room of
the basement of the Mississippi Department of Archives since the MSC was
disbanded 21 years ago.

David Ingebretsen, the executive director of the American Civil
Liberties Unions (ACLU) who led a 20-year court fight to force the state
to unseal the files, told AFP it would take several days, even weeks, to
sift through and make sense of the information.

Other southern states had also established Sovereignty Commissions to
resist court-ordered desegregation. But the MSC, founded in 1956, was
reputed to be one of the most zealous in efforts to track down and
discredit civil rights activists.

The MSC compiled files on 250 organizations and tens of thousands of
people, including civil rights workers, college students, state government
officials and others.

Citizens were paid 100 to 150 dollars for information. Black and white
snitches infiltrated and sowed division within the civil rights movement.

"The agency spied on people, played dirty tricks on them and tried to
do anything it could to disrupt the civil rights movement," Ingebretsen
said.

Many in this Deep South state are comparing the reopening of this
violent and tragic chapter in Mississippi history to the divisive trauma
caused by the opening of East European security police files after the
fall of the Berlin Wall.

Information collected by the MSC was given to law enforcement
officials, employers and also helped fuel the terror campaign by the white
supremacist Ku Klux Klan, civil rights officials said.

White supremacists are believed to have perpetrated hundreds of attacks
on civil right workers between the mid-1950's and the 1970's, particularly
in Mississippi, where 15 murder cases are still unsolved, according to the
Southern Poverty Law Center.

"Many people were damaged by the actions of the Sovereignty
Commission," said Ingebretsen. "By opening the files, these people have a
chance to seek justice. If illegal acts were committed against them, they
can sue the state or the actors who performed those deeds."

Among those seeking justice are relatives of Vernon Dahmer, a National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) leader who died
of burns and smoke inhalation after Klansmen firebombed his home in
Hattiesburg, southern Mississippi in 1966.

The Dahmer family hopes that opening the MSC files will lead to the
conviction of top Klansman Sam Bowers, the man believed to be the
mastermind behind the Dahmer slaying and other terror attacks in the
1960's.

A year after Dahmer's death, Bowers and six other Klansmen were
convicted on federal conspiracy charges for killing three civil rights
workers in 1964. He was jailed for six years in the 1970's.

Information from the MSC files had already led to the 1994 murder
conviction of another Klansman, Byron de la Beckwith, more than 30 years
after he ambushed and killed civil rights activist Medgar Evers.

Beckwith, now 77, is serving a life sentence in prison. The Evers
slaying was the subject of the movie "The Ghosts of Mississippi".

Mississippi lawmakers had initially sought to destroy the files, then
fought to keep them sealed until 2027. But a federal judge ruled in 1989
that the documents should be made public on March 17, 1998.